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Henri Decaë

Camera

Born July 31, 1915 · Saint-Denis, Seine-Saint-Denis, France

Died March 7, 1987

Also known as Henri Decae

Biography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Henri Decaë (31 July 1915 – 7 March 1987) gained fame as a cinematographer entering the film industry as a sound engineer and sound editor. He was a photojournalist in the French army during World War II. After the war he began making documentary shorts, directing and photographing industrial and commercial films. In 1947 he made his first feature film. Decaë is strongly associated with directors who strongly influenced, or were part of, the French New Wave. These include Jean-Pierre Melville, Louis Malle and Claude Chabrol. Decaë first worked as a cinematographer with Melville on Le Silence de la Mer (1949). Decaë also edited and mixed the sound. Although Decaë worked with Melville on Les enfants terribles, which as Williams commented (1992, p333) "...the work is more accurately to be viewed as a stunning demonstration of the cinematic possibilities of faithful literary adaptation in the hands of a gifted director", according to Marie (p 88) it was his distinctive camera work on Bob le flambeur which caught the attention of the Cahiers critics. Malle hired him for his first two features and Chabrol for his first three features. They had been lucky as Decaë was finding it hard to get work at that time as he was being informally shunned by many after participating in a critical film about the Korean War. By the time Decaë worked for François Truffaut on The 400 Blows he came with a reputation, which meant that he was the highest-paid person on the film. Decaë's liking for natural light, his ability to work at speed as well as his excellent photographic sensibility led to him working with René Clément on several features beginning with Plein soleil (1960). It was Decaë "...who liberated the camera, from its fixed tripod. He made the New Wave possible, backing up Melville, Malle, Chabrol and Truffaut." (Marie, 2003 p 89)

Filmography37 titles

The 400 Blows

1959Director of Photography

Le Samouraï

1967Director of Photography

The Red Circle

1970Director of Photography

The Sicilian Clan

1969Director of Photography

Purple Noon

1960Director of Photography

Elevator to the Gallows

1958Director of Photography

Lust

1962Director of Photography

The Silence of the Sea

1949Director of Photography, Editor

The Mad Adventures of Rabbi Jacob

1973Director of Photography

Delusions of Grandeur

1971Director of Photography

Bob le Flambeur

1956Director of Photography

The Professional

1981Director of Photography

Léon Morin, Priest

1961Director of Photography

Le Beau Serge

1958Director of Photography

The Night of the Generals

1967Director of Photography

The Day and the Hour

1963Director of Photography

The Cousins

1959Director of Photography

The Boys from Brazil

1978Director of Photography

The Terrible Children

1950Director of Photography

The Lovers

1958Director of Photography

Death of a Corrupt Man

1977Director of Photography

Joy House

1964Director of Photography

Cop or Hood

1979Director of Photography

The Black Tulip

1964Director of Photography

Magnet of Doom

1963Director of Photography

Witness in the City

1959Director of Photography

The Hard Way

1980Director of Photography

The Comedians

1967Director of Photography

The Light at the Edge of the World

1971Director of Photography

Diabolically Yours

1967Director of Photography

Eva

1962Director of Photography

À double tour

1959Director of Photography

Castle Keep

1969Director of Photography

Circle of Love

1964Director of Photography

The Island

1980Director of Photography

An Almost Perfect Affair

1979Director of Photography

Don Juan or If Don Juan Were a Woman

1973Director of Photography